After a childhood marked by loss and grief, Hölderlin studied theology in the illustrious company of Hegel and Schelling, before concentrating on poetry and writing his most famous work, Hyperion. But, afflicted by the pressures of life and a doomed love affair, he gradually went mad, and spent the final thirty-six years of his life in a solitary tower in Tübingen, cared for by a kindly carpenter. The younger poet Wilhelm Waiblinger (1804–30) was one of the few people to gain Hölderlin's confidence, and visited him often; this is his beautifully written memoir of the stricken poet, a unique insight into his personality, sensitively translated by Will Stone.
Das Schwäbische Liederbuch : Eine Auswahl aus der klassischen schwäbischen Lyrik
Hans Heinrich Ehrler, Christian Friedrich Daniel Schubart, Friedrich Schiller, Friedrich Hölderlin, Karl Mayer der Ältere, Ludwig Uhland, Justinus Kerner, Gustav Schwab, Albert Knapp, Wilhelm Hauff, Nikolaus Lenau, Eduard Mörike, Wilhelm Waiblinger, Gustav Pfizer, Friedrich Theodor Vischer, David Friedrich Strauß, Hermann Kurz, Karl Gerok, J. G. Fischer, Georg Herwegh, Wilhelm Ganzhorn, Max Schneckenburger, Ludwig Pfau, Wilhelm Hertz, Christian Wagner, Eduard Paulus, Karl Weitbrecht
bookFriedrich Hölderlin's Life, Poetry and Madness
Wilhelm Waiblinger
bookGesammelte Werke
Wilhelm Waiblinger
book